- Australian Vanadium (AVL) appoints Graham Arvidson as CEO, effective November 1
- Mr Arvidson has 18 years of experience in the minerals sector and brings project development and management expertise, and business leadership skills to AVL
- He held an executive role at Primero Group where he led lithium operations and provided project development and due diligence services across the Australia and North America
- Mr Arvidson will work alongside Managing Director Vincent Algar and Chief Operating Officer Todd Richardson to progress AVL’s namesake project to production
- Shares in Australian Vanadium are down 2.78 per cent and are trading at 3.5 cents at 1:50 pm AEDT
Australian Vanadium (AVL) has appointed Graham Arvidson as CEO, effective November 1.
Mr Arvidson has 18 years of experience in the minerals sector and brings project development and management expertise, and business leadership skills to Australian Vanadium.
Over the past four years, he held an executive role at Primero Group where he led lithium operations and provided project development and due diligence services across the Australian and North American lithium markets.
“I’m truly excited to be joining Australian Vanadium which has the rare and exciting combination of vision, great people, true industry-leading expertise, ESG leadership, great assets and macroeconomic tailwinds,” Mr Arvidson said.
“Having been in ‘the eye of the lithium storm’ for the last four years, I see a unique parallel opportunity to leverage recognition and scale in the vanadium sector.”
Mr Arvidson will work alongside Managing Director Vincent Algar and Chief Operating Officer Todd Richardson to progress Australian Vanadium’s namesake project from development to production.
“Graham’s appointment brings the right mix of leadership, industry acumen and proven track record in project development and operations to bolster the success of the company and its current team through the developer-producer transition and beyond,” Mr Algar commented.
Shares in Australian Vanadium were down 2.78 per cent and were trading at 3.5 cents at 1:50 pm AEDT.